The 48,451.83 hectare Zimatlán claim are reported by the SGM (the Mexican geological survey) to include several historic narrow vein mines. The veins are hosted in a polymetallic epithermal mineralization environment (gold, silver, copper, lead and zinc) that were mined for the gold and silver content. Geology on the property is varied and includes a significant portion of the historic Ejutla Mining District with grades and geology comparable to the better known San Jose and Taviche Mining Districts. Zimatlán is reported to include potential for iron-gold skarn and disseminated intrusion hosted mineralization.
The 7142.11 hectare Ejutla Fracc. I claim is located within the historic Lachigalla Mining district, immediately south of the Taviche Mining District. The property is known for its porphyry copper-gold potential and has known high sulphidation epithermal veins exploited historically in shallow mine operations.
The 18,866.27 hectare Ejutla Fracc. II claim covers the eastern extension of the structurally controlled Taviche vein system, a system of multiple parallel low sulphidation epithermal polymetallic veins rich in silver and gold. The claim includes several known vein exposures and small past producing narrow vein mines. The claim is approximately ten kilometres southwest of Linear Metals Cobre Grande project which hosts a new Au-Mo skarn-porphyry discovery. The claim is also contiguous on its southern boundary with Aura Silver’s Alma Delia property, host to a recently discovered Higo Blanco silver mineralized jasperoid breccia which occurs in one of the many veins of the Taviche system. This claim has excellent potential to host similar parallel veins.